Daddy and son gay comic

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My 10 year old son has still not been potty trained. He still wears diapers and just like any parent does with their baby, I change my 10 year old son’s diaper. Unlike most parents, I always get a boner when I alter him and have to excuse myself to the bathroom for a jerk off. This time, I don’t excuse myself from the room. My 22 year old son is away at university and when he returns he’ll be in for the shock of his life!

A fictitious story about the romantic and sexual association between a daddy and his two sons... one of which is a 10 year old who still wears diapers and the other is a university student.

⚠️ EXTREMELY UNDERAGE, INCEST, DIAPERS, SCAT, AND WATERSPORTS! ⚠️
THIS IS A WORK OF FICTION AND I DO NOT CONDONE THE UNDERAGE CONTENT IN REAL LIFE!

This perform is currently completed, but I may continue it in the future.

Comic strips about organism a parent usually revolve around conflicts with family members or the difficulties of raising children. It's not often that comics accept the love between parents and children in a heartwarming way, but this dad writes comics about him and his daughter that are cute and emotional at the same time. Solo father Yannick Vicente started drawing comic illustrations of his everyday life with his young daughter Anaé as a gift for her, but quickly realized he was creating them for himself as well.

Hollywood tends to romanticize unattached fathers in movies and thanks to many celebrity free dads, a dude raising a kid by himself is usually viewed quite differently than unpartnered mothers. Vicente wanted to prove dads can be just as affectionate, choosing to reflect authentic life through his illustrations like Inkollo's Daily Life of a Gay Couple. Vicente's heartwarming free dad comics possess gone viral since being posted to Facebook and Twitter, and parents all over the society can relate to the emotions depicted in these comics by Yannick Vicente. Even if you're not a parent, these cute father daughter comic strips are sure to make you smile.

Fulfill Your Scorching Dad Fantasies With These New ‘Dream Daddy’ Comics

Last year, the video game Dream Daddy took the gay web by storm as players got the chance to adoration a number of hot dads while seeking the matchless mate. The game’s combination of sexiness and genuine warmth won over its fans. If you were one of those fans, obtain ready to receive even more delighted, because the first issue of the new Dream Daddy comics miniseries comes out this weekend!

If you initially missed out on the Dream Daddy visual novel (a sort of Choose Your Own Adventure book crossed with a video game), it follows your unnamed character, or “Dadsona” (a portmanteau of “dad” and “persona”) as he moves to the fictional town of Maple Bay. He’s a single dad, and he’s ready to meet all the other steamy dads in his community — ideally, he’ll find a new lover.

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The game was widely praised for its outstanding art and its witty, emotionally engaging writing that made you really care whether or not your dates went skillfully. The cast of dads was also pleasantly diverse, and you could even customize

When I was a kid, whenever we visited my relatives in Indiana, I spent the late hours with my Cousin Buster in the trailer in the obscure woods, and we would squeeze into his narrow twin bed, our bodies pressed together, reading Harvey Comics.  I read until long after he fell asleep, associating the tales of amiable ghosts and little devils with that warmth and affection.

Two boys together clinging, one the other never leaving....

In high university, I looked back on those moments of perfect happiness, and tried to get my hands on the Harvey Comics I read all those years ago (actually less than 10 years ago, but when you're 16, it seems like an eternity).

So I put an ad in the Rock Island Argus, and a very cute Augustana student named Clay answered with an offer of five Tiny Max comics from 1958-1959 for a dollar each.

I never heard of Little Max, they were from before I was born, and a dollar was four times what a comic amount on the newsstand.  But I bought them anyway.

It was a weird type of deja vu, like looking at a photo of your parents before you were born: familiar, yet bizarre, with a story going on that you are not a part of and can't possibly understand. &